TY - JOUR AB - Like Wired, Ray Gun is one of those magazines which doesn't fit easily in any one place on me newsagents' shelves — shifting each month to a new section as the shopkeeper tries to work out whether it is a pop, leisure or even an arts publication. Claiming to be the ‘Bible of Music and Style’, Ray Gun also heralds the ‘End of Print’. Inside, each article consists of text which is either blended into or superimposed on pictures. Disjointed paragraphs in a variety of typefaces — some of which are barely readable — are produced in a collage format. The overall effect is one of a desktop publishing system which has crashed, sending its contents to the laser printer in a random format. Despite the content being difficult to read it can be assumed — as it has reached issue 23 — that the magazine itself is read. Ray Gun's prediction of the end of print betrays its own belief in having discovered something new and exciting. Exciting it may be, but throughout the eighties artists in Europe, in particular Wulf Rheinshagen of Germany, were producing work which now looks strikingly similar to the magazine pages designed by David Carson. VL - 13 IS - 2 SN - 0264-0473 DO - 10.1108/eb045355 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/eb045355 AU - Kruger Peter PY - 1995 Y1 - 1995/01/01 TI - Not forgetting words T2 - The Electronic Library PB - MCB UP Ltd SP - 145 EP - 146 Y2 - 2024/04/20 ER -